I am at a point closest to it, orbiting the narrative, eager to explore the setting, meet the characters, and find myself falling into The Book of Fire. It has a cover the colours of flames: red, orange and yellow. It is adorned with tears, so sad is the story.
The author embraces sadness, loss and recovery, sets fire to a Greek island with it, lets it engulf a village, and it seems as if all the magic, memories and love have gone up in smoke with the trees and wildlife. I feel the heat like breath on my face, it burns my fingers as I turn each page and watch the suffering, death and loss, of homes and loved ones.
I am overwhelmed with the urge to comfort the main character, Irini, when she finds the man who started the fire, barely alive with a rope around his neck, beneath her beloved half-charred chestnut tree, and I feel her pain when she is torn between helping him and leaving him to his fate.
I feel her despair at her daughter Chara’s injuries, her husband Tasso’s burnt hands, and his depression because he cannot paint the scenery he loves – it too has been burnt and all he has left are memories in the remaining landscapes on the walls of his dead father’s house.
But then I marvel at the glimmers of optimism that dot the novel, when Chara starts to draw the blackened forest, or when they rescue a burnt jackal and nurse it back to health, and mourn the characters and their hopeful world when the novel comes to an end.
Kim M. Russell, 7th September 2023

Laura is our host at the dVerse Poets Pub this Thursday, where we are meeting the bar with prose poems. She tells is that today is National Buy a Book day and has given us some wonderful examples of poems about books by Rebecca Hazelton and Roger Mitchell, both of which are prose written as poetry: it looks like prose but reads like poetry, has paragraphs rather than lines, but includes some familiar poetry devices.
Our challenge is to go to the last book we bought/read (or make it a favourite one if we can’t remember) and write a prose poem about it in approximately 250-300 words.
*the point nearest to the sun in the path of an orbiting celestial body (such as a planet)
the opener invites us to dive in and read on amongst the flames and turmoil – so much more poetic that the usual book synopsis Kim. Some rich imagery here Kim not least in that 2nd paragraph
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Thank you, Laura!
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So much heavy duty reality to take in, yet within the ashes a possibility of a tomorrow without pain.
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That’s true, Lisa!
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Very nicely done Kim. Sounds like you really got into this story!
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Thank you, Dwight. It’s a great book and I was immersed in it from the start.
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Those are the best kind!
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Sounds like an emotional journey for all, both the characters and the reader. (K)
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It’s a wonderful book, Kerfe, and very emotional.
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Sounds like it is a powerful book…feeling the heat like breath on my face…it is so like that a bushfire. Nicely penned prose poem. 🙂
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Thank you! It is a very powerful book, and so beautifully written.
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Well it has made me want to read the book,vif you are overwhelmed with urge to comfort the main character. You have paid a l9vely tribute to this book and it is true with a good book you become part of tje story.
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Thank you, Alison. I hope you do get to read it.
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I feel for the scenery artist. Your nice review makes me want to read the book. I’ll check with our library. Thank you for your comment. Let us hope that science will hurry and find a cure. By medicine now, we can delay its progress some. Right now I am taking an eye vitamin every day.
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Thank you, Jim. It’s worth reading. I think it’s on audio book too.
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Fires in Greek forests is a bit too close to home for me, Kim. I don’t know that I’d be able to suspend disbelief and find comfort or optimism in the situation. The characterisation has obviously marked you deeply though, a testament to the quality of the writing.
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I was a bit worried about that too. It was written before the fires happened this summer, and the writing is so beautiful you overlook that. It’s by the author of The Beekeeper of Aleppo.
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Oh, I’ve heard of that! One for the list 🙂
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I love the feeling of getting so involved with the characters in a book. It sounds like you really felt for them, Kim. Beautiful imagery.
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The writing in this book is beautiful. It’s by the author of The Beekeeper of Aleppo.
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It sounds lovely.
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I’ve seen this book and love the cover. I’m still on the fence if I should read it or not. If it’s only sad…I don’t think I can take it. I need that ray of hope to be in there. What do you recommend?
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There is definitely hope. The writing is beautiful and I would read it again.
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Beautifully written Kim, with rich imagery, it does invite me to read it ❤️
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Thank you!❤
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I am trying to bring poetry into everything I write and write poetry about everything and in this review, Kim, you lead the way superbly…
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Thank you so much, Andrew!
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That’s one book I’d certainly be drawn to, sounds intense and powerful, visceral. You drew me in.
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Thank you!
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